1! tet pub. A PRESIDENTS ADVISERS. A LOOK AT A OABXVET AS IT AP PEARS WHEN XV SESSION. Thft Cnlilnrt Itoom In Ihe Wl.lt llsnw-Whal I Done at a Cabinet IMertlnf. Frcsident Cleveland changed one of the cabinet days from Friday to Thurs day, and now meets his constitutional advisers on Tuesday and Thursday of each 'week. This is the only change Mint has been made. The forms that have been observed for half a century and more on cabinet days are still undis turbed. The hour of meeting is 13 o'clock noon, and the room is the same that has been used for the meetings since Lincoln's time. It is the room im mediately at the head of the Btairs lead ing to tRe business part of tho White House. On the right as you enter is tho door leading to the library, where the President roceives his visitors, and on tho left is the private secretary's office, to reach 'which you have to climb two or three steps. The cabinet room is open to visitors at all times when the cabinet is not in ses sion. It is a plain room with no strik ing feature about it. Its two large win dows, extendiug from ceiling to floor, command a lovely view of the sweeping lawns, the monument and tho shining Potomac beyond. The interior is simplici ty itself. The walls are painted in a drab tint, the ceiling is frescoed with flowers and cherubs, and a mantel of cinnamon colored marble surrounds a capacious fireplace, where hickory logs are usually blazing cheerily. A flowered Brussels carpet with a black nnd red background covers the floor, and gray silk rep cur tains hang at the windows. Between the windows hangs an oil portrait of John Hampden, a label on which informs us that it is reputed to be a Vandyck. On the opposite wall is a portrait of Wash ington, by Cadena, the (South American artist, which was rjresentcd to tho gov ernment in Hayes' time. A large bird's eye view photograph of the city is over the door leading to the President's room. Maps of the United States and of South America and Washington hang on the remaining walls. In one corner stands a large school globe, and in another is a revolving bookcase of modern inven tion, which is filled with revised stat utes, dictionaries, and various public documents. Kear the door to tho Presi dent's room stands a small walnut secre tary, and near the windows a small wal nut table to match. The lounge near the door leading to tho hall and the dozen chairs distributed about the room are of walnut upholstered with, flowered raw silk to match the carpet. The table around which tho cabinet is seated is an octagonal affair of black and French walnut in tho fashion of twenty years ago. It has a profusely carved central leg and legs at the corners. It is covered with billiard cloth. Tho eight armchairs that surround it. are all alike, of walnut with rep upholstering. Tho cabinet looks like this when it is in session around the table : President. Bacretary of fctat Secretory of the Treasury. Secretary ot War. Secretary o the Navy. T. VS. General. Att'y General Secretary of the Interior. Very little formality attends the meet ings. The members generally come singly, rarely in pairs. Each always car ries under his arm a portfolio such as lawyers use for papers, only the cabinet portfolios are more antiquated than those affected by lawyers as old proba bly as Senator Evarts' hat. The cabinet portfolio is a thing of calfskin, about 24x20 inches. It has a single pocket covered by a flap. It has no lock, but is fastened by two straps and buckles. Some of these portfolios are probably a hundred years old, and the greater num ber have seen from a quarter to half a century. The newest is exactly like the oldest in pattern, and each is lettered with a stencil to indicate to what de partment it belongs. Each member of the cabinet shakes hands with all the others when he ar rives. The President usually comes in after nearly all his counselors have ar rived. He shakes hands with them all around and chats w,t ten lor a mo ment, and then takes his seat at the head of the tubie, his advisers taking their places in the order indicated in the dia gram. The session begins at 12 o'cloc k exactly, whether the members nave ail arrived or not. The President does not rap the meeting to order, and it is wholly informal throughout. No vote is taken on any question. If the President wants the individual opinion of his advisers on any subject, ho asks for it, but he de cides the question in his own way, with out regard to whether a majority of his advisers is for or against his views. No minutes are kept of cabinet meetings, aDd, as no reporters are present, tho pro ceedings are never given in detail. An ex-cabinet official says tho public loses little by the observance of secrecy, for tho talk is discursive and fragmentary and would not be read if published. Nevertheless all necessary precautions are taken to prevent the proceedings of cabinet meetings lrom being overheard, and a full report of one has not been published since the days when Webster was secretary of state. An enterprising correspondent of that day in some way contrived to get into an adjoining room, where he could overhear every word. Sir. Webster himself discovered the leak after several meetings had been reported, nnd ever tince the rooms have been care fully watched. Imagine what eight bank directors or an equal number of asylum trustees on pretty good terms with one another would do if shut up iu a back room away from public gaze, and some notion probably can be formed ot what a cabi net meeting is like. All the pictures that are made of cabinet groups are ab surdities. The secretaries do not stand iu tragic attitudes with hands thrust in the breast ot ciose-uuttonea coats, nor do they stand with an elbow resting in M the mantel, nor sit wi'.h folded arms and knitted brows. They just sit carelessly and easily at a table like other folks, toying with penholders, tearing scraps of paper, or thrumming on their port folios. There Js no set form in which the coun cils begin or continue. The subjects discussed suggest themselves. Opinions are passed all" around the boards, and nearly every member has something to add to the common fund of information. Tho President has always two or three vexatious questions on hand to submit to his councillors. The political history of the past half century is full of quarrels and dissensions in tho cabinets of various Presidents, but theso outbreaks, as a rule, have not oc curred at stated meetings of tho cabi net. There havo been instances whero members became so hostile to ono an other that one or tho other would stay away from cabinet meetings, and many cases where personal relations were so strained that only icy formalities were passed by way of greeting; but as a whole the sessions of the Presidents with their advisers have been pleasant and without remarkable incident. Kew York Sun. Meals in Ilrail. A traveler in Brazil writes: "Outside of a few houses and hotels in ftio, Brazil ians eat the same kind of food at every meal. There are usually placed on the table, cither at breakfast or dinner, a dish of boiled pork, chietly fat; a dish of scraps of meat, stewed in potk fat, sometimes another dish of stewed scraps with a sort of jam and cabbage; some times a chicken, at first boiled in water and afterward stewed in pork fat; a dish of black beans stewed in pork fat; a dish of maize, dried and powdered; a dish of rice boiled in pork fat;and some times a dish of powdered mandioca root. There is no bread; thcro are no vege tables of any kind except the cabbage, black beans and yam loot; there is no salad ; there are no condiment or herbs in the cooking, not even black pepper, unless especially requestod; thcro is no cruet stand ; there are no spices, no sauces; there is no mutton, no veal; there are no joints of beef, no beefsteaks, no cutlets, no chops, no pieces from any recognizable portion of bullock or sheep; nothing but mangled pieces of lean, stringy and flabby meat stewed in pork fat. There is no fresh fish, there is no dried fish, such as mackerel, halibut,cod or salmon; there are no omelets, pan cakes, corn-cakes, pies, puddings, or, in deed, anything else but what are men tioued above. It is an un wcai y ing round of pork fat, black beans and rice or rnealio. These viands are eaten by mix ing a portion of each in the plate, stirring up the mess until it has every appearance of food, loading up tho knifo with it well down to the handle, and thrusting the blade into the throat until it can go no further. "There are no spoons or forks for the dishes. Each man or woman sticks his own knife into the dish. Knives are never cleaned on a board, only with dishcloth. The kitchen rarely has a flooring; never a range, stove or oven, and never a chimney. The floor is of earth; the cooking apparatus consists of two rows of mud bricks straddled by a tile and furnished with a few earthen pipkins; and tho chimney is the whole room. There is no frying pan, no grid iron, no soup pot, no kitcheners. It is impossible to roast, to bake, to fry or t' broil. Food can only be boiled or stewed, The fuel is sticks of timber ten to fifteen feet long, gradually shoved into the fire as the ends burn off. It is impossible o heat a flat iron. Clothes are ironed with a hollow iron tilled with hot wood ashes. There is no running water; there are no pipes conducting water into the house. Water is brought in jars on the heads of degraded looking women. Europe in the middle ages was a paradise compared to Brazil of to-day, if personal comfort, clothing, food, cooking, means of com munication and the habits of the peoplo resulting from these circumstances be taken as tho gauges of comparison." Big Animals. Take the gigantic moa of New Zea land, that enormous bird who was to the ojtrich as the giraffe is to the ante lope; a monstrous emu, as far surpassing tho ostriches of to-day us the ostriches surpass all the other fowls of the air. Yet the moa, though now extinct, is in the strictest sense quite modern, a con temporary very likely of Queen Eliza beth or Queen Anne, exterminated by the Maoris only a very little time be fore the first white settlements in the great southern archipelago. It is even doubtful whether the moa did not live down to tho days of the earliest colonist3, for remains of Maori encampmeuts are still discovered, with the ashes of the fireplace even now unscatteied and the close-gnawed bones of the gigantic bird lying in the very spot where tho natives left them after their destructive feasts. So, too, with the big sharks. Our modern carcharo- don, who runs to 40 feet in length, is a very respectable monster indeed, as times go; and his huge snapping teeth, whicn measure nearly 2 inches long by H broad, would diodain to make two bites of the able-bodied British seamen. But the naturalists of the "Challenger" expedition dredged up from the ooze of the Pacific similar teeth. 6 inches long by 4 wide, so that the sharks to which they originally belonged must, by parity of reasoning, have measured nearly 100 feet in length. This, no doubt, beats our biggest existing shark, the rhinodon, by Borne thirty feet. Still, the ooze of the Pacific is a quite recent or almost modern deposit, which is even now be ing accummulated on the sea bottom, and there would be really nothing aston ishing in the discovery that some repre sentatives jf the colossal curcharodons are to this day swimming about at their lordly ,leisurs among the corul reefs of the r;6uth Sea ishtals. That very cautious naturalist, Dr. Gunther, of the British museum, contents himself indeed by merely saying: "As we have no record of living individuals of that bulk having been observed, the gigantic species to which these teeth belonged must probably have become extinct with in a comparatively recent period. CWt Uill. The Biitish Co-ut Journal tells of a plan to rig a parasol over the heads of soldiers in the Soudan to keep oil the hot rays of the sun. NEWS AND NOTTS 10R WOMEN. One of the new shades of green Is called chartreuse. Squares of frosted gold are linked to gether for bracelets. Gold and woolen laces are much used on the now spring hats. The favorite color of the Trinccsi Beatrice is pale heliotrope. Women's names adorn more than half the American sailing ships. Tho old-fashioned knitted purse of our giandmothcrs' tinio is revived. Forty-eight English women have di plomas and aro registered as physicians. Bonnets and hats are quite handsome for the spring, and show a great variotj of shapes. Velvet collars of nny color preferable, both standing and turned down, aro very becoming to all ages. A daik gxeen and gold embroidered bonnet is ornamented with a large clus ter of Marshal Neil roses. A beautiful fabric called Limousine conies in small plaids, and is especially suited for children's dresses. AVaists grow longer, basques shorter, collars higher, skirts fuller, hats and coiffures higher, dress less artistic. Japanese girls are said to have small, plump hands, and to use their linger nails as pens w hen writing love letters. Tho prettiest slipper is still that made of undressed kid, in the various mode colors and gray. Yet the patent-leather slipper and low-cut shoo is much worn. The wide metal braids which are used for the trimming of high-crowned hats are very effective. White wool braid is used with quite good effect on dark, blue and black straw. Miss Addio Kurtz is tho deputy sheriff of Franklin county, Pa., and bho re cently escorted seven male prisoners from the county jail to the penitentiary at Philadelphia. Lace-making is again a favorite fancy work among the English and Russian la dies, and for those whose eyes cau stand the trial it is a charming and artistic employment of leisure hours. The tapestry stitch is being learned by young ladies who have good eye sight. Some very artistic designs may be imported from England. Tho scheme of color is like that in old Gobelin tapes try. Silk bolting cloth is used for sash curtains. The embroidery which em bellishes these curtains is after the Japanese, and is very much the same on both sides. The effect is very charm ing. Velvet or velveteen, in contrasting color with the etamine, or cashmere, or wool stuff of tho frock, is used to excess for the cuffs, belts, collars and capes, pockets and parcmcnts of children's garments. The fashionable New York poodle must be as tenderly shielded from the dust as his devoted slave and owner, and he, therefore, now wears a tissue veil swathed around his head when tukrn on Fifth avenue for his airing. Chenille trimmings will remain fashion able, and we shall have chenille embroid eries, passementeries of cheuillo and silk, chenille and velvet or beads, among others beads cut with facets which glitter brilliantly, and are of all tints and colors. Plain gray cottons and gray-blue are made up with red to look very pretty for country wear. The red sometimes forms a frilling, over which the contrasting color is cut out in points or shell shapes, while upon the bodice it forms a tucked vest. The Russian hat has a high peaked crown and a wide, rolling brim cut open at the front and back. The points thus made are faced with velvet and a hand some aigrette of flowers or feathers falls gracefully over them at the front for garniture. Pretty over-all aprons for littlo girls are made of two wide breadths of nain sook or lawn tucked at the bottom and shirred back and front of the half arm hole, which is finished by two wide bands of the muslin tied into a bow on the top of the shoulder to retain th apron in place. These aprons are closed back and front. The trade of the hairdresser and cos metic maker prospers at present, says the New York Sun. Tho coiffure is high and elaborate, demanding the use of much additional hair, and frequently of the wig. With the hk'h coiffures come the profuse use of powder for the face and hair mouches, or black patches on the cheeks, lips, thin, forehead and neck. Miss Sarah E. Raymond has been for tho past nine years the superintendent of the public schools of Bloomington, 111. She graduated at the Illinois Normal University in 18(30, and has bceu engaged in schoolwork ever since. As a teacher, she passed through all the grades of the Bloomington schools from the lowest primary to the principal of the High school. In London they are having flower wed. dings, which means that the bridesmaids are dressed in gowns made to represent some flower. A daffodil dress, for instance, is made of deep yellow. The satin skirt is quilted like the outer leaf of a daffodil. The bodice and polonaise are of surah of a lemon color, like the hearts of the daffodil. Yellow stockings and shoes and gloves of lemon hue are worn with this dress. Greenlanders, it is said, live in the hope of a warm heaven and a cold place for the wicked. Mr E. K. Hoyt, a mechanical engineer at tho New Orleans Exposition, was severely injured by a huge derrick pole fulling on his foot. He wus conveyed to his residence, and after only thiee ap plications of St. Jacobs Oil, all the swell ing and pain ditanpeared, uud he re sumed his duties. "I'm just immersed in my business," said the teacher of swimming. Don't hawk, hawk, blow, pir, and disgust everybody with your oH'ciiMve breath, but ua Dr. Kage'ii Catarrh Remedy and end it. Theke are mid to be over 3oO,0u0 species of living animals. ISed-Rugn. I' lie. Flie.s, roaches, anLs, Led-buKs, rats, miee, gophers, chipmunks, cleared out by "ltougli It Nt Hn(rjtr that consumptive should be the Iwmt appre lionsivo of thHr own condition, while 11 their friends are urging and besowhing them to b more careful uliout exposure ana ovordoing. It may well be ronaiflrrrerl one of the most alarming symptoms of tbn disoaso, where the patient is reek less nnd will not lislieve he is in dancer. Kondor, if you are in this condi tion, do not neglect the only means of recov ery. Avoid exixisuro and fatigue, be regular in your habits, nnd use faithfully of Dr. Pierce's "Uolilen Medical Discovery." It bos saved thousands who wore steadily falling. A STRONO, well-fed camel will carry 300 pounds, including two persons. It u pi ii re, Ilrrnch or Hernia.. Hew guaranteed cure for worst case with out use of knife. There is no longer any need of wearing awkward, rumliersomo trusses. Send two letter stamps forpam t hlet anil references. World's Dispensary Medical Association, 003 Main Street, Buffa lo, N. Y. If Montana quails aro exempt from the sportsman's gun for six years. A century of progress has not produced a remedy equal to Kly's Cream Halm for I'ntnrrh, Cold in the Head and Hay Kever. It is not a liquid or a snuff, but is perfectly rate and easily applied with the linger, ft gives immediate relief, and cures the worst cses. Price &0 cents. At druggists. 00 cents by mail. Kly Uros., Owego, N. Y. "A (iod-send is Kly's Cream Balm," writ.09 Mrs. M. A. Jackson, of Portsmouth, N. H., on May U'J, IHs-j. 1 had catarrh for threo years; hnd tried nearly nil remedies, but to no pur)ose. Two or threo times a week my nose, would bleed quite freely, and 1 thought the sores in it would never heal. Your Balm has cured me. This, preparation is not a liquid or snutr.nnd iseasily applied. Price 50c. Ely's Cream Halm isthemstetrectivp,con venient and agreeable catarrh remedy ever used, and I have tried them alt. C. B. Cook, Banning, Laulerdale Co., Ten 11. "Hough on Pnln." Cures cholera, colic, oiwiiiw, diarrhaa; aches, pains, sprains, headache, neuralgia, rheumatism, ZOc Hough on pain plasters, 15e, Soo F. & R.s' Gluten Flour adv. next week. Ton rvsi'EPSiA, indiorstios, depression of spir its and general debility in thoir virions forms, 1po ns a preventive against fover and ague and otherintermittent fevers, the "Ferro-Phosphor-sted Klixir of 1'alisavs," made by Caswell, Hazard fc Co., New York, and sold by all Drug gists, is the besttonio ; and for patients recover ing lrom feveror other sickness it has noequ&L Thin People. "Wells' Health Konewer' restores health and vigor, cures dyspepsia, impotence, (I. As Item of Interest. "Beeson's Aromat ic Alum Sulphur ISonp prevents, cures and heals skill diseiiBes.soltons and beautifies face nnd bands, by Druggists, or by mail. Address Wm. Dreydoppel, 1'hilndelphia, Pa. Mothers. If you are failing, broken, woni out nnd ner vous, use "Wells' Health lteuower." 1. Drgts. Curf. UHKl M V I ISM. H (il A.M I ATICA. Lumbiio, IWUi. hr. llradxhe. Toolhaehe, Br Thro.1, Mw.lliacv r.la.. rlr.Uet, Harai, bc.Ua, Frwt BUrr, and olarr rata, aaa ArbM. FnTC.at.atMI!.. .liDr.ir;i.'..ii.! IWtari. Iicii.,UuM HIIUIAKI IS A. Vlrt-LLlirUO., BaJUar, d., ITZ. KlU U-19 A (.rent nrnrfnrtor of Women. Lydia K. riukham of Lynn, Mass., is often spoken of as tho gr.?at Itonefoctor of women nnd frequently receives letters like the one we quote from, written by a lady in San Francisco. She says: "I am taking your Veg otuble Compound and find great benefit from it. Jt has dime me more gaotl than a'l the Doctors." Mrs. T. of Vincennes, lnd , writes: "Having taken 11 bottles of your Vegetable Compound nnd cured by its use, I feel very anxious that every woman nftiieted with Womb Disouse should make use of it. An other lady in Birmingham, Mich., was suf fering from weakness and displacement. Khe tuys: "1 began taking your Compound and it helped me so soon, I feel like proclaiming to the World its great virtues as a healing agent for women." 1 K 1'ontnlH Hahied in Thre H"A-. XU aiul M'frf; of VOAttVM I'TMOX, ilt'ssrv. L'mcUlock & Co., 1082 Kate M., I'hila., Pa.: ntl'iiten Please tend nie twelve bott!e of Dr. II. .Iambs' Cannabis Iniiica. one each of Pilla and Ointnii'iit. for a friend of mine who is nut expected to live; and u vour medicines curod me of ('ou. HHiitittiott some three yean ao,! want him to try t'lfm. 1 Ruined fitteen pounds wlnlo taking the first tliro bottles, and I know it la just the thin for him. Kespectfnlly, J. V. II I'LL, Lawreuceourg, AUilemon to., Ky. I am an oM man. For 39 yenra I nulTcrpil with ul cers on my riKiit'tfA" the rcttull of lypiioM ft-vtr. Aiiiimuitlon vt an suKk'i'hti'd a tho only incuiiH of pre wtvIiik Uff. 'l lit. Morturri cuu U 1 tio iinthuiK for me, and thought I must die. For three yeixrn I iit-vvr lwl a nhoe un. Swift' SptH'lnV has uihUl u permanent cure and added U'Q yvMu lu my life Wit H. Kkkd, Hall Co., Oa. I have taken Hwlft'i Specific for Mood poison con tracted ut a medical collie at a dissection, while I vt&H a medical Htudcnt. I am rrat-ful to Hay that It L'uve me a speedy and thorough cure after my parent liiid bpcut hundredH of dollarit for treatment. AuuL'biLM WfcNbiCL, M. !., JNfwarlc, N. J. Swift's Rpeolfle is entirely vegetable. Treatlae on Blood and oklii IMKeaM-it mailed free. The Swift Spfcific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Oa., or W. ttid bt., N. V. ALL IMPERFECTIONS of the Face, Hand A Feet, huperrtuonn Hair, MoIch, WartFrt tkleti, Moth, lied N"M', Acne, ltl'lc Hem Ik Scitn. Pittinu- 3 nil tieatnient. Itr.John Voo0iiry ,U7 IS. I'eiirl .St.. Altjuny, JS. V ivMuuiiMini in. u. ftcnil .lie. lor IMMii. now Instruction Hook on art of making 1'himt Howera and T1ahiit Taper Kmicy Work for liniMi (lMiratHina. TlhMiea and Flower Matrriala told. Hook uud price list mailed, l'lru. I.KWIS X ID , fca.t 4,h Mrri, New York. S A F e"rTHAM BO N DS Mou.v invest! d In Western Cattle-Kainnir hiisinesn paH I. to Itf.i pit t'vnt. M'hi-Iv divtuW ndw huii.ttiB-t Kan eh A C- 1 1 1 ii 4','a ni.-.k lor fcttUi, i ulm, !. .jru.ire. Addrenti V. II. pI' l-i.M'I'lt 'l re ute.irt'r, No, 1 8 llrtiadw ay, Svw Vork l ily. We will nond you our 1 JllHll'MCliOU llooU at' iVuiiev l r It. It tcacnea Hie nineties, itibbon nni Arratwiea F..(.(m.d(iry. Ijinslre uud U I'lini iik I ou PalnliH )(u.v tod i otmnnuiif, etc. humi tttaiuu lu pay LRfi.Ut.ttik, T.K. i'AKKtit, Lmiii, Mum. AGZHTS WANTED imw till O l. hu)f.. eitriy. J r ht tt lurne. A ib uitittdu lor anybody. A Iirl . U-h arm-In t Iravl on or tttdl it Mil home eily villfH or country. Addrenw A. JMUX.K iV I O., tri.riie, .. V, GOOD V AO Eft e.i'b-tid htt'thiae-i. btr terms audrens T. It Ji.N KISS. iNuiisf r muii, Uut ui Nier, N. V. AlrUTC VV'ANTFU in ethry t mn and city in tun Utvkl I tJ V , S. and t'niiitua l r J"i.tn' I.Btewt lm-lr-.el r(il v Stum II' Idur, tMrcumr and tren lo V. Y. JOM.S, -J 'Im i a M i Miilluln. N. Y. PH-VV pB.fV Great English Gout and btf.Ual ii Rheumatic Remedy. ul I'.nx, . l.OOl rouud, 60 claw EM PLOYM ENTlrSSta Al 8ACARV per ami. AU EXPENSES V I r Pr Mm. Qvlok. inr, Honfe trm. W I v I V C.f.tua Aja.j, uIwm at., fcvw Import mi t. Whn tn vti.lt or lari Nrw York (Mtr, aavwharffat-T,, Mpr- and IM nan-i hire, and atop at tit Urma i V'utnT1 H"tl. np.Mft Grand Omural dnpnt, fii'Mlaa; nt rooma, ntt'-rt nn at a onak of ti m.lti'H dol Ian, ill an1 npward pr(iav. K.irrM plan, Kl vat or. KBtanranl mippliml with then nt. llitra i e. vr., Taa-e and Movant railroad tr all dnpnt4. Famili-it rn 1W b(Ur fir leia innn? at th tirand Uniua Hole) than at any ottiar Ana clou hotnl In tli u-tr. Tic nut son's salary ns poet lnureate is f .St. a yenr. Scrofula T.nrkf la the Mood of nearly every ono. In many cmc Inherited. lt "overeat form l that of rumilnu ore on the arni, lriin, or feet. Btinchea In the Rlanila of the nock, I'lmples, rancorotia Rrowtlin, .wollen Joint", and tlilcRcnltifi of the upper lip, aro other aymptoma. Hood's Raraaparilla ha" had wonderful aurcoaa In enrinif ecrofnla. It thorottRhly eradlcatoa the humor from tho blood, and tilvcs it now vitality and rlrhnoM. Albert I!te., 28 Kant Tinn Btreet, Iwell, Ma., had been troubled with acmfuloua humor from boy hood, and In the nmmer of had a larue rnn nlnif aoro on hla left. On takltiR Hood's Hnroaparilla tho aoro Rradually disappeared, and he han had no indication of tho humor alnce. Mra. Km. McDonald, Woo.tcr, O., for 1 monlha snfferod with acrofulotta .welling of thoplanda In tho neck, llood'a Ramanarllla (rave Immediate relief, the swolltnim beinR lamely reduced. Hue think" there la nothliiR eutial to It. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold hy all dntmrl.ta. (I; all for 5. Made only hyU. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Jewell. Maas. IOO Dosos One Dollar RADWAY'S READY RELIEF t'l'REM AMU PltKTKNT.S Colda, Coughs, Bor Throat, Inflammatlori, XhenmaUam, Nearalffia, Headaoh, Toothaohe, Arthma, Dlffloolt Breathing;. rrnEW TUB WORST TAIN! In from on. to twaaiy mtaatti.. Nul arte hex r niter reaoiiif thia ad. vertUHHuant ed anyone Ml I' Hi It WITH l'AI.N. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Is Cure for Every Pln, Hprnlna, Ilruiara, I'!. In the Hark, t'Le.t ar l.lmbs. It was the I I ret and Is the Only PAIN ItlSIYIlSDY That Initantlr Btopa tha moat tucrnnlatlnff r'n. altnys iiitlamiTiatinn. and run tJoniinnnw. whathvr ( tha J.uDc. htumaob or Bowale. or ottmr tclaotla or organs bf una appliuation. It mi tad with tbroaUavd PNEUMONIA, Or any Inflammation of tha internal organ or mucus nuaubransH, aft-r expuaum to coJd, wet, rto., Ittao no Urn; butapply HaJwaj Kaiiaf ovar the part aRm'tod with oongtliori or lutUniutation and cure tbn patient. A tfaapi(tn(ul in b.ill a (unihietr ot wninr will in a (aw minutait oura t'rampK. IspaMii), Hour Klnruafh, Heart born. Nervnuauesa, Sla..pe8lleba, Hick Hvadarh, liaxrhnr-a, UjaeDlery, Colic. Flaiuleooy, and all uitar ual paina. MALARIA ( I UKI1 IN ITU WORST KOR.1IS. Tk.r is set a remedial a sent in tli. world that will ear. t-'.ver autl Ague ami all other Malatt -ti., Ililttui. and oth.r f.iet., aidel ut II AIIW.U 'S i'll.l.S.au quick .. ItAKWAV'S itli.MIV liDI.II 1 illy cents per boule. Maid by DrusvUts. Dr. Raiway's Sarsaparilliau RcsoM THE GREAT BL000 PURIFIER, - For tha Cur of All Chranic Diacaaaa. Ohronio Khamuatiim, Kcntfnla. Hrphilitle Onm rlaiuu, ato. (aaa mir brvk on Vanrreal. etc.; rK wauty-tiTo oenia), (ilandular Swallinsi, Ilackinr ir 'oukIi, Uancert.ua Affectum. Blaadina of the l.unca Drapepata. Waier Hraah. White hwulhnna. Turn. -re, PimplHH, Bletche.. Kruptmna of tha I'ca, Ulcers Hip DlaMa, tioiit, l)r.pny, Kicketa, aSaJt Klieuin, H on ohilia, Coniumption. iiabta. Kidney, lilatlilar, Liver Com plain la, ato. HCROFULA, Whathar trantmltted by parents or arnnlreii, la within the cunt ire ran go ot tha A It S A 1A K U.I, 1 AN KKsOl.V KNT. Cures Iikta been made where neraona have be n af flicted with Scrofula imm Ib-ir T'ith up to 9u, Wand m ycara of aaa, far l(. HADWAV'M SAItA PA 1(11,1,1 AN KHNOI.VkN Y, a rmajy enmpoaed ot incredienta of axtraurdinar medical properties, eaaeniial to purifr, heal, repair ami infigorate the broken down aod wasted bodv. Quick, pieaaant . aate and permanent in it treatment and cura. bold by all diaxgiata. Una dollar a. buttle. Dr. RadwayT"Regulatin2 Pills For tha cura of all di tor tier of tha Htomaoh, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, N-rvnue. DUeaaea : Iam ot ApMtita, Headache, t; natiiation. t'ntivrnaa, Indi. (Tealion. lyapepiia, Billuusuess, ler, InlUmmal i-n of tha Bowels, 1'ilet and all draii(emnta of tha lu teraal Viaoera. Purely vegemble, uintaminc no mer cury, minerals, or deMer.ous nrucs. frle. o ceota per box. Hold by all drumtiati. tr-Send a tetter stamp fKAIVA V A' t'O., No. 32 H nrrrn HI. Naw VorU fnr "KalM and True.'' TO TMi: IU 'Klill'.-Uo aura ai dank for Kadway's, and aea that the name "Hadway"ia up what you buy "To Tobacco Users." Hale's T I, in ti"t a miiture of disagreeable herl t to he lined ,tH h Kubr-tiluto; hut a pleaeant taiitinif pre. fiaratum, which acta an an "Ant Kioto' to tobacco, uniiitf thepoiHtm frmu the blood. th:'rly rfmivin UysiHM.ftia, hour btotnaeh, and all othor iliaordere caused by tha usa of tobacco. Prica $l,w) par box. 6 boxes $3.uu. h ADDBES8 C. F. HALE & CO.. Box 1831, Boston. Mass. en Dots YOUR BACK ACHC1 r so. aeeuv a HOP PLASTER." The RTrlflVrtES'P a.nrt BEST Poroua Plaster maU. Whi-n applied to aohee, bUniiia, bruiswjs.ahju p and dull paina. weak- iieua or aorcnoas iu any part, inatant relief Is felt and tna p.rta wonderfully stronirthened. Coa I tuins virtuea of Hops. Huivuncty PlUih and Ounia. I Used by multitudes. Never taila. Hop Flaetora Qtd everywhere. Only 2ft rente, o fnr $1 .(H). AXLE GREASE. rst la tbc World. Jtfwlc only by the Krar.ir Luhrlca U 't Co. ai ChUugu, N. Y. & buLoum. Suld everywlurt. A S 35 Harness for SIB 1 af()Nk.I ' objtu t t-j your Ituy at W hnleoaleu rivus. Our No. tiatti, worih 4.. No. 1 at 1 worth $ 4. No. 2 at $11, worth J(i. ii.OOO Kcia eold IhmI Kur, GtKxin aent on spi.ioval to any placo in tha U. ti. AUENTS WAN i l l. NATIONAL HAKNrSH CO., 14jJO, 18. 2i X 2$ WrlU t., ltuftulu, N. Y. Bvaaewnowdw saiini v j m vim Anil Unlit tinuie work fir l.udirM t.iit auwhere by mail. Siinplo ami atrx'th toua flitH, .Nn inavitHv inir: n. atamptt Addroaa A i I.SiHN IJAVIS, ! II 11 .'.. till,! lull Kivcr .Hiiha. CONSUMPtTON. t have a pusitivo remedy tie the above disease; by Us ate thousands of cass of the worse kltut and of fooff Laadln' Imva been cured. I ndei-l. m si rune i bt faith iu U- efficai'T.llmt 1 wi I send 1 WO ,Ol l l.K FHfcE, tOKtther wuii a V A 1,1 A H i.fc TUt A'i'lbli on ilns d:aaa toaur sulT'Ttr. Glv;ircw i.d P O. dUr . lilt. T. A. bLu. UM, )i fcarMt., Jsow York. vV MONTH iml . -u uuy a iU "ylt-ii lo . T I our itixm.s. Nu cuiiiia. required, tosiary paid tl' utaraFitKK. Wi nx-au wliat say. (Standard Silver Maxtt Co.. WuMhinietuii Int., liuatoii, JUuaa. UiuiH tl. t..r,i.isinMnrt. run r- LADY fhounlil 1 -MitliMr, lltiiun, Httivtiii). The beat huintt iMM.k i-ver published. btuuM lie m evry liumj und rad at evrir liruai.lw, rleautiiully llluHlrAlod. Cuu Urns the bright rat thoutchla ui tno brat lunula. Kits ly tM.hl. tiitd pay to eitrii"r.t wurker'. Addit-as uuu klv bKYAN, 1 AVLOU A t;o., biiG Hi-uadway, N. V. tl. U. AWARE THAT Lcrlllari's Climax Plug hfartnc arra fin uu; iimt J.orllUrd's Koic lenf nne t-tu : t liMt 1 jti-ni..r.i -a Navy C'lipplntea. aud that Lorillurd'a Nuulla, axe liiw best und cheupeat, tjiuility cousUierod t TELEGRAPHY TWKhS 1 VAI.fc.NTI.VH IllidS., Jn ND SmjATIONS li. t ih.i.i.. ru i.. uneaville, H i. ' f H TJ"P"f T"0 ',BTAINKU ,,r lnvi utora. Cir Irfl I Pi J I N IT"' ire. U H. hsow ft Co., ml a 1 p V p Tf A 1 -Ta tB Ha yz cmtiss DM BABES or Tim XTDNFTS 1JV1CU SLADDES ' AND TTRINART CROAN8 DROPSY ORAVRT. IJIABETFfl BRIOKT'S IHRHA8B I"ATOS rw Til SACK roras OR 8TDI ISBKV0TT8 DI8BABC8 MTZTTTIOir OR . or Pr tha as ef ibl 111SMDT, ths Blom-' aohandBow.ls pofdtly rri-aln thoir atrn(tth, ana th blood 1. purified. It I. prouounoed by hunrtreila of ths bs doctors to bs ths OM. I. T CTJRl tor all kinds ot Kidn7 Bla- It la jniTsly Tg. tablo. snd oui-as whia other mediolnss fail. It Is prepared pmaly for tlisss dia. eases, and has nTr been known to fall. Ons trial will oon. Tlnos yon. Tot sal by all druavlsts. I1U.CS 1.SB. Bend fna Pamphlet ef Testl. noniala. ninvT's i KB.WEOV CO., PrctTldsie, B. I. 4 VBJXX. llUNTfl (Kidney and Liver. RKMKDY has saved from liniierniK diaeaae and death hundrsif who have been aiveu up by phyaiciaui to die. Alike on tli veranda of the mansion of wealth and la theliitle octtann upon the hill will the r.'lreahinf in fluencoof Kidu"'-) ltlanc Mange he apparnt. II in nourihiDir, Hatinfyitiv, aid is prepared in a fw mh ntca. l-'nll d ntctinns ocroniiany each can lor ou.-ttnH, piiudliiKK, etc. Tut up in lour aires iVc, r'A, an I $1. iA. No. 4 Nitn nNpecially adapted to tninllii a. I M M EDI AT E RELI E F. -a . itii v luu ...... r n iit tltui an. V w.ve tliriT fourth, the iioal st onio' 'k'; furul iNhi-d r' .fl r" a" "ua rm tlllitl .bii.. .1.1 liw4. for hot wi n a. If bv uiaalc and t a noun liold rr-mi-ify whiTeTi-rkuowufot Hbrumutlnni. NcuraUfl. he. Toolhai'ne, liuru. irHlliattilii nruiH-. cwit- ....... u.. Th. ! 1 1., r it.i n u.im.i . ' nin.lv I. nut un In &uc.. 1 end as iiat'kasra. ITie.sno. rjeke. when re,lucd to liquid form, will II 1 twoos. bottles. Von ran easily figure th sa.lM. AaTUU run folu uioney In srlllnc Iw Or der a pa.'knxe and you will be rKulHr (runuimer hereaTtex. fiiriuDll ilAeiiAn'a Pa tarrh Remedy rxwltlTely ur.: nfiy oents by mail. Satisfaction Kiiaruiitoi'd. Stumps takell. Paynes itrn l-FADF.R. Wa offer aa i lu H . V. mounted Fnine with W 111, lO in. (ohd itaw. Mi ft. blttne. vant hoeks, tig complete fnroperallen, on csr. tl.lf-it, Knjrine oa ekl lp, lean. 8n for cirouUr(B. It. W. PAYK iV HONS, Mauufarturora of all styles Automatic Kn- SfarM f rnm 8 toai-ti 11. P.: alao Hulleya, llansera aod jiaUiiar.Kliuira, N. Y. Box I Hot). fl hat. taken tha If-sd la the hales ul tlit cltu of remedies, and has gtvem aiiuerst uoivarsal tauttao MURPHY BROSj fTia, Ta Ahaswon tha fever of the pul'hi and now ranks among- tlte laaOmgj MaaU la 111 (lt O MU. A. L. SMI I If. U'sdlard, Pa. ftoMby riiii r:nu I'llvl II VU, LSQUED GLUE Awarded GOLD MEOAL. LONDON, USB. Vt4 hy Alafcjn a lUmlm Orti.a end ri.no Co.. Pullmaa l'alnr. ('.r('u..ar. MI'il enlT hT th, RUSSIA CEMENT CO.fiLOUCESTeR.MA8SoLB EVtRYWHEHt. iWoampl. Tin Cau bj Mall, lie. BOOK AGENTS WANTED As PLATF0r.r.1 ECHOES rU VIMJ I tillilKfor Uesd 4 llewH hlU A bran n w yJohni. Gough lllSt CoiQairttd Minister say ' (hftfpeed it." Kvery oaelaairtu aod Cries ever It, Teas t lanaiRod art aitia; fnr it, and Ajau aril 10 U M a4ar. Cf r-vr-s. H splrndid Fnirraviiirv lutroductloa f Kfr. L MAN AliKWI 1', U. it. 1UOO wamrd on .rT .j,.,ial V.r,,.. SenJ fnr Clrrulara. u u A. 1. WOUr.ll.. TON Jl to. Uvtrurd. co.J: BEST TRUSS EVER USED. Iniproved Klafttin Tnina Wi.rn niKhtaud day- I'oa Hivdv curva Ituptnre. Knt hv mail every wh"r. W rite fur full iktnpUva oinmlara to the NewYorkKlastic Truss Company, 744 B'dway, New vjrk TOlntrodueeandaellths trade the well-knewn nl relehr.led Cisaraut t lie N K V YORK 4 HAVANA CIC Alt IOMHAN V. Uber.l arranKeiimuiM. Kaj.as or Ciimmimbiiin paid to U.. rihl man. lu luri..i nartH-nlars and l.-rnia .,t.1r..a( at once TueNuw Vurk A: lluvnuu 'l(iar Co., o7 Hiu.ilw tt?A.rlL.Vork. 1l lOnPHIFJEcp Chloral and ium Habits KANII.Y VI llf.lt. HOOK KKEE. DR. J. C. HOFFMAN, Jefferson, Wisconsin. THURSTON'S STflOTHPfl ffDER Krcpliic Teelh Perlei t aud Ciuut Healthy. WIllBrlCag.HrlTOBBIggS fur relief , crTrara KIOOER'S F'ASTiLLt:S.I: Msriphln Ilnblt Cured In ID VI HJjtl 1)m. J. bit a. .- war nil cured. ihsn, lbauuu, Utiio. mi.rMKN WAN'I'KI). id W.e S'fu.li V,.rk. Adihea. J. AlnllN MIAW. iirsiryuiHii. RcKiheaUir. N V. P ATCH I KJ1-"rR" IMK-kair-s "f Nillia and Batiut WORK. diu. A. ft. HAMSbTI', li.. he.ter.'N.y. IK In i iia.i.S -i - mi Automatlo Engines and Saw-Mill, jF' roreslo 1 f yl lO 6 DiYI.Vj A v waaraataed ai te M 7 aaaaa Btriouira. j Uraely y taa Vtva, ChialcU Co. . MlnQatl,C,r,!10 LFPAG Vyj-'A,-'---ii-rT- a 1m th. I rat aid to a.,1,,1 unlluif. Slr . '-ai One i-opv UK:. '.1)6 U'dwa.. N. S CLOCKS SSS'CLOCKS 3: J ( e